Just three weeks into President Trump's second term, and Democrats are already having nightmares about 2028. And frankly, they should be terrified.
A fresh look at the Democrat presidential field reveals what can only be described as a complete disaster waiting to happen. While Trump's America First agenda steamrolls through Washington with Vice President JD Vance perfectly positioned as his heir apparent, the left is stuck with a collection of has-beens, never-weres, and radical extremists that would make even Nancy Pelosi cringe.
Who exactly do they have? The same tired faces who got demolished in 2024, plus a few fresh-faced socialists who think America wants more of the Biden-era failures that voters just decisively rejected.
The Usual Suspects Return
The Democrat establishment is desperately trying to recycle politicians who couldn't beat Trump when he was supposedly "vulnerable." These are the same people who promised to "restore democracy" and instead delivered inflation, open borders, and woke military policies that weakened America on the world stage.
But here's what really has Democrats panicking: Trump's second-term agenda is working. Mass deportations are securing our border. American energy dominance is bringing down costs. The DOGE efficiency program under Elon Musk is cutting government waste. Even mainstream America is seeing through their lies about "authoritarianism."
"How do you run against success? How do you campaign against prosperity and security?" one anonymous Democrat strategist reportedly admitted.
The answer is simple: you can't. And Democrats know it.
America First vs. America Last
While the Trump-Vance administration delivers real results for working Americans, Democrats are stuck defending the very policies that got them thrown out of power. Open borders? Check. Climate extremism? Check. Anti-parent school policies? Check.
Patriots, this is what winning looks like. When your opponents are this weak, this early, it means the America First movement isn't just succeeding – it's completely reshaping American politics.
The real question isn't who Democrats will nominate in 2028. It's whether they'll even be relevant by then.
